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Archive for July 2008

Power Rangers Jungle Fury 19 PATH OF THE RHINO 1/3

 

Let’s Download Power Rangers Episodes

‘Power Rangers’ for action fanatics

When I watched this show for the first time on ABC, it appeared to me like some Aliens have intruded on earth. I had heard the name of Power rangers for several times but to me it was an animated series. But when started watching it from the season three from the episode ‘Power Rangers- Zeo’, I became a regular viewer of the show. The concept of super heroes dressed in bright colors and with masks on their faces on the real roads and forests, really proved catchy for me.


It just satisfies a sort of fantasy that what would have happened if there were the real monsters and super heroes on earth somewhere. The original scenery makes it different from other animated series. Because I am the person who least likes animation series and instead of wasting time in watching an animated series I would like to go for a video game. After all I can participate in that. But this combo of superheroes dressed like animated characters but on the real earth is extraordinary. Moreover I can watch Japanese tricks of fight. The super powers like invisibility, super speed, telekinesis and other innate abilities make it more interesting. An action fanatic like me gets a healthy dose from this show.

As I started watching it from season three so, in my vacation I just searched it on internet and downloaded previous two seasons too. The different colors of costumes for warriors make identify the difference in intensity of powers of different rangers. Like red rangers, blue rangers and there were silver and orange rangers too in one of the episodes.

Here is another site from Disney its Disney XD, here the American web users can watch the episodes before they air on TV.

Pink Ranger & Yellow Ranger

Power Rangers is a silly, goofy show, but ‘fess up - who doesn’t love it just a bit, huh? Ninjas in spandex with laser guns? Giant robots beating up giant monsters? Amy Jo Johnson? Okay, she’s not in all of the shows, but it’s still a recipe for fun.

The Yellow Ranger is Veronica “Ronny” Robinson, a confident and sometimes overly competitive stock car racer. Her physical power is superhuman speed, which exceeds even the capacity of the eye to note. Before becoming a Ranger, Ronny was competing in an Italian race. The Pink Rangers
is Rose Ortiz, a Mensa-level genius archaeologist who enjoys poetry and mythology. The latter interest makes Rose an invaluable source of information regarding the legends which she and her companions must use as the bases for their treasure-hunts. She lacks a robust sense of humor, though she has been made a figure of fun on some occasions. Her power is invisibility. Before she became a Power Ranger, Rose was studying in London.

There have been many and varied Power Rangers toy ranges over the years, but more often than not the female Rangers have missed out - even in lines of five action figures, it’s not been uncommon for only the males of the team (and various male guest Rangers who pop up from time to time) to get figures made of themselves. Fortunately the Operation Overdrive line takes the common sense approach and features all of the five core Rangers, including the girls. About time.

Power Rangers - while not as moronic as its detractors like to believe - is not a sophisticated show, and these are not sophisticated figures. From the neck down they’re identical, not just in sculpt but also in paint - in a clever cost-cutting measure that doesn’t really detract from anything, the paintwork adds the colours both figures have in common, so only the colour of cast plastic is changed. The figures are unremarkable but quite satisfactory representations of their on-screen counterparts - both female physiques in form-fitting (but not too tight, or figure-hugging) costumes, with various bits of sci-fi whatnot attached to them as belts, boot and glove tops, and so on.

As befitting the Power Rangers, the design and appearance is bold and simple, with bright colours and clean shapes - the makers haven’t sold the figures short on quality, but nor have they gone out of their way to include a lot of detail or texture. One oddity not often seen on action figures is that a factory sticker is still stuck to their backs in the packaging, and may not peel off cleanly if you try to rip it off too fast, so be ready to pick little bits of adhesive off your Ranger’s back.

The heads - helmets, rather - are identical at a glance, but closer inspection reveals small differences in the design, with the Yellow Ranger sporting a larger lower-face grille and narrower visor, and the Pink Ranger having a more streamlined design to the top of her helmet that doesn’t extend as far forward as her twin’s. The Pink Ranger I found has rather a nasty accidental spot of black paint on her jaw, and it wasn’t the only anomalous dab of paint I saw among the figures on offer, so be careful when you choose one to take home - while the production standards aren’t shoddy as such, there are notable errors.

Being functionally identical, both Rangers have identical articulation: a swivel neck, swivel/peg shoulders, swivel/pin elbows, swivel/peg hips, swivel thighs, and pin knees. A waist would have been nice, as would swivel boot tops, but all in all the articulation is quite sufficient for broad action poses, and let’s face it: Power Rangers aren’t about subtlety. The lack of a balljoint neck doesn’t hurt as much as it could, since the faceless helmets tend not to dominate the body language of the figures as much as bare heads with visible faces would.

Each figure comes with two identical accessories, and one unique one. The common pieces are a heavy pistol and a handheld communicator, both molded in light gray plastic with no paint apps, both rendered in the chunky, look-at-me-I’m-technology style of the show’s props. The figures hands are grasping, but not open enough for either accessory - being soft plastic, they accommodate the pistols quite well, but the communicators are a touch thicker, and can take a bit of work to get in a satisfying hold.

The other accessories are BFG-sized blaster weapons, both of which have a light-up feature. The sculpts are unique, with the Yellow Ranger having a blockier, techier-looking gun in yellow and gray, with an upward-angled muzzle showing off the light-up tip, and the Pink Ranger having a sleeker, rounder weapon in gray and white, with the light more shrouded by the muzzle. A button on top of the barrel lights up the tip, which shines nice and bright - batteries are built in, but accessible to be swapped if they ever run out. The blasters only have a single grip, suggesting they’re over-sized pistols (like, really over-sized), but they’re so big that it can be difficult to keep the figures standing upright if they’re holding them outwards.

These aren’t going to be up for Toy of the Year - their sculpts won’t have McFarlane or the Four Horsemen shaking in their boots, their articulation isn’t the envy of SOTA’s Street Fighters and their accessories won’t have Diamond Select/Art Asylum slapping themselves for not putting in as much effort themselves. But they’re cheap, colourful, and fun - if that’s not good enough, you probably didn’t want Power Rangers anyway.

David Yost Biography

 

 

Yost was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa on January 7, 1971. He moved around throughout the United States as a child and won many gymnastics competitions nationally. Among these were the state championships for both Iowa and Montana. He moved to California with hopes of becoming an actor and auditioned for a role in the Power Rangers series just 2 months after arriving. He won the part of Billy Cranston, the nerdy power ranger.

Yost starred in 200 episodes of the series over the next several years. He also portrayed Billy in his most high-profile work, Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers: The Movie, which took in over $30 million at the box office in 1995.

1995 was definitely Yost’s year, as he also had a minor role in the film Ladykiller. After this, however, Yost’s influence began to fade.


Little is known concerning Yost’s activities over the next 3 years. In 2000, however, he attempted to mount a comeback, portraying a playboy photographer in the made for TV movie After Diff’rent Strokes: When the Laughter Stopped. The role had little to no impact on the film world, and Yost slipped into obscurity once again.


In 2001, he first tried his hand at producing, working on the series Alien Hunter and Temptation Island.


David stands 5′7″, and has naturally blond hair.


As personal hobbies, David has rode Wavejammers, windsurfed, swum, hiked mountains and written screen plays in the “bizarre, twisted” genre. Harold Pinter is his favorite playwright.
A nomadic child traveling around America, David found himself competing for the State of Montana and the State of Iowa gymnastics until 19 years old. (He was an “excellent gymnast.”) Graduating Graceland College soonafter around 1991. He then packed his bags and settled in Los Angeles to wait tables for two months before the auditions for MMPR were ready to role in September of 1992.
At 16, (circa 1987) David attended four years at Graceland College and left with a degree in Speech and Communications and BA Theatre Arts around 1991.


To win the role of “Billy Cranston” in 1992, David had to out-perform three to four thousand hopeful actors. It took eight callbacks before David recieved the news.